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Contemporary Colombian

Google: 4.4 · 2,935 reviews

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Bogotá, Colombia

El Chato

CuisineModern Colombian
Executive ChefÁlvaro Clavijo
Price≈$48
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
World's 50 Best
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste
The Best Chef

Among Bogotá's most globally recognised modern Colombian restaurants, El Chato has held a position inside the World's 50 Best since 2023 — reaching #25 in 2024 — while keeping the format deliberately relaxed. Chef Álvaro Clavijo applies European technique to native Colombian ingredients, producing a menu that reads as a producer ledger as much as a dining list. Reservations are taken for lunch and dinner Tuesday through Sunday, with Sunday service closing at 4 pm.

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El Chato restaurant in Bogotá, Colombia
About

Where Chapinero Alto Meets the Global Rankings

The neighbourhood of Chapinero Alto in Bogotá sits at an altitude where the air is noticeably cooler and the streets noticeably quieter than the commercial corridors below. The restaurants that cluster here tend to reflect that register: considered rather than showy, with dining rooms that read more like converted houses than purpose-built gastro-temples. El Chato, on Calle 65, fits that profile — a space that gives little away from the street yet holds a position inside the our full Bogota restaurants guide tier that few addresses in the city can match. It ranked #25 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2024, having entered the ranking at #33 in 2023, and sat at #54 in 2025. La Liste placed it at 93 points in 2025 and 88 points in 2026. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #19 among South American restaurants in 2025, up from #29 in 2024. The trajectory is consistent and the peer set, at this point, extends well beyond Bogotá.

Modern Colombian in a Global Frame

Colombia's fine-dining scene has spent the past decade building an international argument for itself. The country's biodiversity — encompassing Amazon lowlands, Andean highlands, Pacific coastline, and Caribbean littoral , gives chefs a larder that few national cuisines can replicate at that breadth. The kitchens that have drawn international attention tend to share a common framework: rigorous producer relationships, technique borrowed from European training, and a commitment to ingredients that predate the colonial period. El Chato sits squarely inside that framework.

Chef Álvaro Clavijo trained at the Hofmann School of Hospitality in Barcelona and at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris, then worked in kitchens at Per Se and L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon in New York before a period at Noma in Copenhagen. That sequence , classical French foundations, American precision, Nordic foraging discipline , maps directly onto what El Chato does: producer-credited menus, native ingredients treated with structural rigour, and a format that stays approachable without collapsing into informality. Comparable credential sequences appear at addresses like Atomix in New York City, where international training is channelled into a nationally specific culinary identity.

Among Bogotá's modern Colombian tier, the competition at this price and ambition level is genuinely tight. Leo, led by Leonor Espinosa, pursues a more anthropological approach to Colombian ingredients and has its own sustained international ranking history. Debora Restaurante and Afluente represent younger entries in the city's ambitious restaurant conversation. El Chato's distinction within that set is partly its bistro register , the format is relaxed in a way that the word usually softens rather than explains. Here it means counter-style visibility into the kitchen, a room that doesn't demand occasion dressing, and a menu that presents Colombian producers as the argument rather than as backstory.

The Spirits Programme and Agave's Place in It

Across Latin America's top-tier restaurants, the drinks programme has become a proxy for the kitchen's sourcing seriousness. Where a wine list once sufficed, the beverage offer now increasingly incorporates regional spirits , in Colombia's case, aguardiente, rum, and, with growing frequency, mezcal and agave-based spirits sourced from Mexico. The shift reflects both a broader bartending movement across the continent and a deliberate alignment between kitchen philosophy and bar philosophy: if the food argues for artisanal production and geographic specificity, the spirits list ought to make the same case.

El Chato's bistro format and its sustained critical attention from programmes like OAD , which weighs food and beverage programmes together when ranking South American restaurants , suggest a bar offer that isn't an afterthought. Artisanal mezcal pairs particularly well with the flavour profiles common in modern Colombian cooking: smoke, fermentation, native corn and agave threads running between the glass and the plate. That affinity has made mezcal a natural presence on the drinks lists of restaurants operating in this register across the continent, from Cartagena addresses like Celele to Medellín's Carmen. At El Chato, the sourcing philosophy that governs the kitchen extends, by design, to what arrives in the glass.

How El Chato Sits Against the Wider Colombia Scene

Bogotá now functions as Colombia's primary fine-dining reference point, but the national conversation extends across cities. 1621 The Restaurant in Cartagena works the coastal Colombian register, while Domingo in Cali and Manuel in Barranquilla mark the spread of serious kitchen ambition beyond the capital. Within Bogotá itself, the modern Colombian category also includes Casa Mamá Luz and Gamberro, each at different points on the formality and price spectrum. Harry Sasson in Bogotá anchors the older generation of the city's fine dining.

El Chato's positioning inside that map is specific: it operates at the intersection of international ranking credibility and neighbourhood accessibility. A #25 World's 50 Best ranking would typically signal a dining room with ceremony commensurate with the number. El Chato has maintained both the ranking and the bistro register simultaneously, which is a less common balance than it sounds. The closest international analogy might be addresses like Le Bernardin in New York City, where sustained ranking position coexists with a format that prioritises substance over spectacle, though the price and formality levels differ considerably.

Planning a Visit: What to Know Before You Go

El Chato operates at Calle 65 #4-76 in Chapinero Alto. Service runs Monday through Saturday with lunch from noon to 3:30 pm and dinner from 6:30 to 11 pm. Sunday lunch runs noon to 4 pm with no evening service. Given the restaurant's consistent ranking presence and a Google rating of 4.4 across nearly 2,750 reviews, advance planning is advisable , this is not a walk-in proposition on most evenings. Chapinero Alto is well connected by taxi and ride-share from most of Bogotá's central and northern neighbourhoods. For broader trip planning, see our full Bogota hotels guide, our full Bogota bars guide, our full Bogota wineries guide, and our full Bogota experiences guide.

Signature Dishes
chicken hearts with candied native potatoesmussels with coconut rice and arracachaescargot with golden berry and seaweedtuna wellingtonsmoked morrillo
Frequently asked questions

At a Glance

Comparable venues for orientation, based on our database fields.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Intimate
  • Sophisticated
  • Bohemian
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Design Destination
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingExtended Experience

Dimly lit and intimate with modern yet rustic décor; sophisticated but relaxed fine dining atmosphere with an open kitchen visible from the tasting menu area.

Signature Dishes
chicken hearts with candied native potatoesmussels with coconut rice and arracachaescargot with golden berry and seaweedtuna wellingtonsmoked morrillo